Faber updated the paper in early 2013 and it now includes four
full decades of data.
Not exact matches
Advocates
of federally subsidized day care from infancy tend to shrug off this kind
of data and argue that the next
decade will inevitably lead to nearly three - quarters
of families having two
full - time wage earners.
The most amazing epidemiological study on the safety
of formula has been going on for
decades, it's called «a large proportion
of full term humans in the developed world», and there is currently no hard
data that there are dangers, or even visible trends associated with formula.
After nearly 2
decades of struggle, resulting in considerable gains, women still make up only 12.5 %
of senior faculty (associate and
full professors) in the natural sciences and engineering at all U.S. universities and 4 - year colleges (see upper graph), according to National Science Foundation
data.
There's the implications
of this too: Dr David Evans who consulted
full time for the Australian Green - house Office, now the Dept
of Climate Change,1999 - 2005, modelling carbon in plants, mulch, soil and agricricultural products said in an interview, that satellite
data over the last 2
decades shows that the amount
of plant biomass has increased by 6 %.
Note that for each
data set, the
full - sample (about 30 years) trend is within the confidence interval
of the 10 - year trend — so there's no evidence, from any
of the
data sets, that the trend over the last
decade is different from the modern global warming trend.
Since we already have
data for the
full year
of 2011, I have calculated the warming trend required for the next 9 years to reach 0.2 deg C over the entire 20 - year period (and that is a linear warming rate
of around 0.556 degC per
decade, or a linear warming
of 0.5 degC over the 9 - year period that is still left.
In fact, in the most recent few
decades, the rural sites have become slightly warmer than the
full data set, and show a trend
of -0.19 + / - 0.19 °C per century over the 1950 - 2010 time period, roughly consistent with the trends reported in the first method.